You can call it the Trump phenomenon, polarization among
Americans, or whatever you want to call it. From my vantage point, Trump’s
transition team is making some troubling decisions that are going to
reverberate well into next year, and the ones to come after it.

Even before the man’s in office, Trumpocracy is already beyond
my worst nightmares. It’s so awful that it’s hard to even keep track of
everything I need to be angry about. But here’s my best attempt.

First, there’s the strange personal behavior of the man himself.

Already some psychiatrists have raised alarm that he exhibits
traits seen in people with Narcissistic Personality Disorder. They cannot
ethically diagnose him without examining him, but they’ve called for him to be evaluated.

One area of concern to them is his thin skin and impulsiveness.
Instead of paying attention to the tragedy in Aleppo, for example, he took to
Twitter to attack a comedy show and a magazine that gave his
restaurant a lousy review.

Second, he isn’t bothered by facts, or perhaps cannot tell the
difference between truth and lies. When the FBI and CIA agreed that Russia
interfered with our election, he refused to believe them.

Perhaps if he’d attended those boring intelligence briefings,
he’d have the facts about Russian hacking, but he claims he’s too smart to
bother with those.

This is a security threat. The Russians didn’t just hack the
Democrats — according to more recent reports, they hacked the Republicans, too. They have leverage against
Trump’s own party. Trump needs to know about information that could possibly be
used against him, or against our country.

Third, there are his conflicts of interest. Since Trump has so
far refused to put his assets in a blind trust, there’s the risk that Trump
will use the presidency to enrich himself and his family.

Instead, he’s placed his children at the helm of his business
empire, even as he also includes them in official government business. That’s
not OK.

Previous presidents went to great lengths to avoid even the appearance of
conflicts of interest. Trump doesn’t care. He’ll continue to do as he pleases
up to the point of breaking the law, and perhaps beyond it if he thinks he can
get away with it.

After all, he knows his Republican Congress probably won’t
impeach him, no matter what he does.

Fourth, there are his appointments. They run the gamut from
white supremacists to anti-environment extremists. He so often places someone
who wishes to destroy an agency in charge of that very agency that Saturday Night
Live joked he picked Walter White, the meth dealer from TV’s Breaking
Bad, to lead the DEA.

As we enter 2017, I’m not among the crowd cheering the end of
2016. Whatever comes next, it’s not going to be good. Let’s prepare to fight
our way through this thing.

OtherWords
columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to
Fix It. Distributed by OtherWords.org.

Thought for the day

Nothing funny about tired Saturday Night Live on Fake News NBC! Question is, how do the Networks get away with these total Republican hit jobs without retribution? Likewise for many other shows? Very unfair and should be looked into. This is the real Collusion!

Individual One’s tweet at 4:52 AM - 17 Feb 2019 after a long, hard day of playing golf at Mar-A-Lago on Day Two of our “national emergency.”

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